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Avengers star Patrick Macnee dies

LOS ANGELES — Patrick Macnee, the British-born actor best known as dapper secret agent John Steed in the long-running 1960s TV series The Avengers, has died. He was 93. Macnee died on Thursday of natural causes with his family at his bedside in Rancho Mirage, his son Rupert said in a statement.

LOS ANGELES — Patrick Macnee, the British-born actor best known as dapper secret agent John Steed in the long-running 1960s TV series The Avengers, has died. He was 93. Macnee died on Thursday of natural causes with his family at his bedside in Rancho Mirage, his son Rupert said in a statement.

The clever spy drama, which began in 1961 in Britain, debuted in the United States in 1966. It ran for eight seasons and continued in syndication for decades afterward.

Macnee’s umbrella-wielding character appeared in all but two episodes, accompanied by a string of beautiful women who were his sidekicks. The most popular and memorable of them was Diana Rigg, who played sexy junior agent Emma Peel from 1965 to 1968. Honor Blackman played Catherine Gale from 1962 to 1964, and Linda Thorson was Tara King from 1968 to 1969. Absolutely Fabulous star Joanna Lumley would also play a sidekick, Purdey, in the “sequel” The New Avengers in 1976. Macnee later made a cameo appearance as a Steed-like character in The Pretenders’ music video for Don’t Get Me Wrong, and also had a vocal or voice-over cameo in the movie remake of The Avengers, starring Ralph Fiennes as Steed and Uma Thurman as Peel. (Macnee’s character in the film was aptly named Invisible Jones.)

“We were in our own mad, crazy world,” Macnee said in a 2003 interview when The New Avengers was being issued on DVD. “We were the TV Beatles. We even filmed in the same studio.”

But while he made his name internationally playing a smart, debonair British secret agent, Macnee was never a fan of the James Bond movies. “I think their stories aren’t that realistic,” he said in 1999. “I think the sadism in them is horrifying ... On the other hand, the James Bond books were fascinating.”

Macnee nearly lost the role of Steed because of his aversion to violence. In a 1997 interview with The Associated Press, he recalled being told by producers that he would have to pack a gun on The Avengers.

“I said, ‘No, I don’t. I was in World War II for five years and I saw most of my friends blown to bits and I’m not going to carry a gun’. They said, ‘What are you going to carry?’ I thought frantically and said, ‘An umbrella’.”

The talented Macnee, who managed to make the improbable weapon seem probable, later became an outspoken opponent of the proliferation of privately owned guns. In his droll 1992 autobiography, Blind In One Ear, Macnee noted that his early life matched that of his famed character, John Steed, in many ways.

The fictional John Wickham Gascoyne Beresford Steed was born in the mid-1920s to a noble British family, educated at Eton and served in the military during World War II. Daniel Patrick Macnee was born on Feb 6, 1922, in London to a pair of eccentrics, and he also attended Eton, although he claimed to have been thrown out for dealing in horse race bets and pornography. He also served in the military during World War II, captaining torpedo boats that sought to destroy German U-boats in French waters.

Before he left Eton, Macnee had discovered acting. He apprenticed in the British theatre, toured in provincial theatres and made his film debut as an extra in the 1938 film Pygmalion. At 19, he married Barbara Douglas, and they had two children, Rupert and Jenny. After the war, Macnee graduated from drama school, but he had trouble finding work, moving to Canada at one point to hunt for acting jobs.

His roles in films included Hamlet (starring Laurence Olivier), A Christmas Carol, Until They Sail, Les Girls, Young Doctors In Love, Sweet 16 and This Is Spinal Tap, where he had a memorable comic turn as British entrepreneur Sir Denis Eton-Hogg.

Before The Avengers, he appeared in such TV shows as Twilight Zone, Rawhide and Playhouse 90, among many others. But it was The Avengers that provided a permanent living for Macnee. He owned 2.5 per cent of the profits, and the series continued to play worldwide into the 21st century. He later explained the series’ popularity: “It’s a very simple reason: It’s extremely good. I feel very justified and delighted in seeing after all these years that the show works.” AP

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